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Joanne Harris's first novel, Chocolat,
was set in the sleepy French village of Lansquenet, where enchantment,
romance, and soft-centered truths issued from the local confectioner's
shop. She returns to the same location for Blackberry Wine. But as the
title suggests, she's shifted her focus from food to drink, choosing a
half-dozen bottles of homemade plonk as the catalyst for her
"layman's alchemy." And even the narrator is no human being
but a faintly tannic Fleurie 1962: "A pert, garrulous wine, cheery
and little brash, with a pungent taste of blackcurrant!"
There are, of course, some less vinous
characters in the novel. Harris's protagonist, Jay Mackintosh, is a
former literary star, now sadly stalled. He spends his time writing
second-rate science fiction, leading a hollow media life, and drinking:
"Not to forget, but to remember, to open up the past and find
himself there again." Yet the nice, expensive wines don't do the
trick. Instead, six "Specials"--a gift from his old friend
Joe--function as Jay's magical elixir. Like Proust's lime-blossom
tisane, they give him the gift of his memories but also unlock his
future, which encourages him to flee the rut of his London life and buy
a house in Lansquenet.
As Jay settles in, he contemplates his
childhood friendship with Joe, whose idiosyncratic outlook was the
inspiration for his only successful book. Meanwhile, he becomes involved
in village life, encountering some familiar faces from Chocolat. Caro
and Toinette, the snooty troublemakers, soon put in an appearance, and
Josephine, the bar owner and battered wife of the earlier novel, becomes
a real friend. But it's a new character, the enigmatic Marise, who
becomes the focus of Jay's attention--and who helps to restore his
literary joie de vivre. This feat of resurrection makes for a hugely
enjoyable read. It also goes one step further in adding Lansquenet to
the map of imaginary destinations, where daydreams can come true with
intoxicating frequency.
Eithne Farry |
Blackberry Wine
- Amazon.UK (Audio Cassette)
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